Northwestern student paper apologizes for coverage of 'traumatic' Jeff Sessions event - The shit these absolute faggots wrote is beyond parody

If you didn't know, this is a highly prestigious journalism program


Northwestern student paper apologizes for coverage of 'traumatic' Jeff Sessions event



Editors at the Northwestern University student paper The Daily Northwestern on Sunday issued an apology for what it called "mistakes" in its coverage of a campus event last week featuring former Trump Attorney General Jeff Sessions.

Sessions, who served a tumultuous term as attorney general under President Trump from 2017 to 2018, announced a bid to win back his Alabama Senate seat last week. He spoke at Northwestern on Nov. 5 amid heavy protests.

The editors at the paper from the well-known journalism school specifically noted the photos taken at the event in their apology, noting that some students had found them to be “retraumatizing and invasive” and adding that those photos had been taken down.
"The Daily sent a reporter to cover that talk and another to cover the students protesting his invitation to campus, along with a photographer. We recognize that we contributed to the harm students experienced, and we wanted to apologize for and address the mistakes that we made that night — along with how we plan to move forward," reads part of the apology.

"One area of our reporting that harmed many students was our photo coverage of the event. Some protesters found photos posted to reporters’ Twitter accounts retraumatizing and invasive. Those photos have since been taken down," it adds.
The online reaction to the paper's apology was swift from across the spectrum, with most arguing that Northwestern, a university with one of the top journalism programs in the country, was abandoning the basic tenets of reporting.

The Sessions event was disrupted by student protests, leading Sessions to say, “This is stupid. They can have a right to do it, OK, but at some point, I have to speak."

"You shouldn’t be blaming young Republicans for meticulously defending their beliefs and putting up with this kind of trash,” he added.
Video on Twitter showed student protesters trying to enter the event, which was free and open to the public, through the back of the building.
On Monday, the paper defended its apology, with editor in chief Troy Closson telling The Washington Post, “Something we thought about a lot this week is how challenging it is to be student journalists who are reporting about other students. We’re thinking about what our role looks like specifically as student journalists who have to cover this, but at the same time we have to go to class with those students tomorrow.”

The Hill has reached out to The Daily Northwestern for comment.

 
this doesn't mention that they also apologized for reaching out to students via an email directory to ask for student responses ("without their consent"). This has been called "an invasion of privacy" and the writers of the piece are being retrained about how to "appropriately" solicit comments from students.

edit: my mistake, they used a directory to send text messages. So non consensual text messages are violence now, or something.
 
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"Democracy dies in dar... hold on, I've got a note from the editor here... umm.. hrrmm.."

It's amazing that these kids show up to protest ostensibly on the basis that they're fighting fascism or something, then turn around and cry that their protest was publicized and their pictures were taken.
 
One area of our reporting that harmed many students was our photo coverage of the event. Some protesters found photos posted to reporters’ Twitter accounts retraumatizing and invasive. Those photos have since been taken down. On one hand, as the paper of record for Northwestern, we want to ensure students, administrators and alumni understand the gravity of the events that took place Tuesday night. However, we decided to prioritize the trust and safety of students who were photographed.

What the fuck actually went on at this event? Students were "traumatized and harmed" by... being photographed?!?
 
At least the comment section on the Northwestern site is calling them out for their faggotry. Small hope.
 
I assumed the bitching was because the students didn't want their faces associated with the protests but...

The language they use in that apology article is just baffling. Sure, being identified at a protest may be embarrassing. "Traumatic"? Are they exaggerating to make the need to scrub these photos more urgent?
Hyperbole is the name of the game.
 
We’re thinking about what our role looks like specifically as student journalists who have to cover this, but at the same time we have to go to class with those students tomorrow.

So they’re afraid. I mean, it’s understandable, these people are violent loons,
 
Hyperbole is the name of the game.
Hyperbole and the fact so many of these specimens are actively competing to be the most offended, most sensitive, most outraged, and most #woke of all the snowflakes in their shitty little industry due to the social capital and kudos it allows them among other disingenuous faux-woke fuckwits

Therefore "student activists" are incentivised to throw massive and occasionally violent public tantrums over ever more farcically trivial non-issues, and institutions are incentivised to bend over backwards to overpander to their whims in ever more disproportionate and obscene ways....all without either party giving two shits about any issue other than their own image and status and neither caring how many innocent niggas suffer directly or indirectly because of their clown antics

As with so many other things, the aim of the game is for talentless drones to try and further their own careers and images, even if it means making the progressive cause as a whole look utterly fucking stupid and useless to everyone outside their bubble.
 
When I was a little kid my pop's college-aged friends were worried about dying in the last days of Vietnam. This is what we've come to?

Somebody phone Kim up and tell him to fire the nukes; we'll provide targeting coordinates to all US college campuses.
 
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